Don’t defy government’s directive on transport fares – GPRTU to Ada drivers


Nene Tetteh Asigbey III, the Chairman of the Ada Branch of the Ghana Private Road Transport Union (GPRTU), has appealed to drivers who are charging unapproved fares to desist from the act.

He urged the drivers to hold on with the fare increment while they awaited the final decision from their transport unions.

Nene Asigbey was reacting to the Ministry of Transport’s call to the Ghana Police Service and other law enforcement agencies to monitor commercial drivers who violate the GPRTU and Ghana Road Transport Coordinating Council’s directive regarding fare increments.

Since the drivers in Ada were also members of the GPRTU, they must obey the directive to prevent any confusion, Nene Asigbey said.

‘I’m appealing to my drivers to abide by the law; we met with the ministry, and an approved fee will soon be announced. If you cannot have patience and you go ahead and charge your own fare, you may be in police custody for not exercising restraint,’ he cautioned.

Though the chairperson admitted the hike in fuel
price, he was optimistic that the approved adjustment would reflect the current fuel and spare part costs.

Two transport unions, the Concerned Drivers Association of Ghana and the Transport Operators of Ghana, announced in a joint statement on Monday, April 8, of a 30 per cent increase in transport fares, effective Saturday, April 13, 2024.

The move, they said, was to make up for the recent increment in petroleum prices.

In contrast, the GPRTU and the Ghana Road Transport Coordinating Council, in a joint statement signed by their general secretaries, Godfred Abulbire and Emmanuel Ohene Yeboah, respectively, urged commuters to disregard the ‘illegal’ increment in transport fares and pay the old fares.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Ghana, other low-income countries still need IMF’s zero interest rate loans


Dr Ernest Addison, Governor of the Bank of Ghana (BoG), has appealed to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to maintain its zero interest rate loans for Ghana and other low-income countries.

The Fund through its Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust (PRGT) provides concessional financing (currently at zero interest rates) to low-income countries (LICs).

‘We underline the necessity for the upcoming comprehensive review of LICs facilities to maintain the PRGT’s concessionality and promote higher access to reverse erosion amplified by the global inflationary episode,’ Dr Addison said.

Keeping the concessional financing, the Central Bank Governor said would be helpful in complementing monetary policies to further tame the inflationary pressures and support economic recovery and resilience in low-income countries.

He said this during 2024 African Consultative Group (ACG) meeting with Ms Kristalina Georgieva, Managing Director, IMF, at the ongoing IMF/World Bank Group Spring Meetings in Washington, US.

The dis
cussion focused on ways to bolster Africa’s financing through the overlapping crises and beyond.

Dr Addison also called for a replenishing of the Catastrophe Containment and Relief (CCRT) resources envelope to offer grant support to most vulnerable members in a shock-prone world.

He also reiterated the request for further enhancements to the G20 Common Framework while leveraging the Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable (GSDR) to promote rapid, transparent, and equitable resolution of debt as well as facilitate debt cancellation for the most vulnerable members.

‘The review of the Fund’s internal debt policies is welcome, but we stress the need to ensure that the changes are impactful and achieve their intended purpose,’ the Central Bank Governor noted.

He also called for stronger coordination of the IMF’s LICs facilities review with the World Bank’s IDA21 replenishment efforts to support LICs in a holistic manner.

On the part of African governments, Dr Addison encouraged an increase domestic financing to comp
lement monetary policy measures amid economic recovery and resilience on the continent.

That, he said had become necessary as African countries continued to face complex challenges against the backdrop of successive shocks, manifesting in a subdued post-pandemic recovery.

He stated that those shocks had elevated debt distress, with a persistent funding squeeze, which had also amplified income divergences and undermined the achievement of sustainable and inclusive growth.

‘Our domestic adjustment policy efforts without adequate financing can only yield limited results, in the context of the complex domestic and external environment,’ Dr Addison said.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Akua Donkor promises to introduce ‘morning and afternoon shift’ system in education

Akua Donkor, the founder and leader of the Ghana Freedom Party, has pledged to revive the Ghana Education Service should she emerge victorious in the 2024 elections.

She asserted that her vision for education reform includes the implementation of morning and afternoon shifts in schools, a system she believes will alleviate burdens on students and enhance accessibility to education.

Speaking in an interview on Akoma FM on April 16, 2024, she revealed that the concept of free Senior High School (SHS) was originally her brainchild, intended for implementation following her prospective victory in the 2016 elections.

However, her disqualification from the race ultimately led to the current President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, under the leadership of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), taking the reins and enacting the policy.

‘I brought the free SHS, and because I was disqualified in 2016, that is why Nana Addo implemented it… and I will make sure that petrol is refined in Ghana.

‘Parents wouldn’t pay any mon
ey; you just have to take your children to school. The children are supposed to go to school in the morning, and in the afternoon, then they close for another batch to go in the afternoon and close in the evening.

“I couldn’t go to school, but I saw those who went to school doing the same, some go in the morning, and others in the evening. And at that time nobody was facing difficulties; no student was renting or going to school for long hours like two months or three months,’ she said.

Akua Donkor added: ‘And at that time nobody was facing difficulties; no student was renting or going to school for long hours like two months or three months. So, that is what I am coming to do. And I have planned it very well.’

Source: Ghana Web

Drivers are right to increase transport fares but percentage must be reduced – COPEC

The Head of Pricing, Monitoring and Research at the Chamber of Petroleum Consumers (COPEC) Sampson Addai says he agrees with the decision of some commercial driver unions to increase transport fares in the wake of the increase in fuel prices.

However, he holds the view that the 35 percentage increase announced by the True Drivers Union and the Concerned Drivers Association must be reduced.

‘They deserve to increase transport fares but they should reduce the percentage of increment. They should sit down with the Ministry and see to the reduction of the percentage. The 35 percent increase is too much, at least 10 or 15 percent increase would have been okay. Times are so hard in Ghana now, and so the drivers should consider reducing the percentage,’ Sampson Addai said in an interview with Daakyehene Ofosu Agyemang on New York-based Adinkra Radio.

His comment comes after the Ministry of Transport directed the Ghana Police Service and other security agencies to arrest any commercial driver who has resorted to
charging new transport fares outside the existing one, thereby, putting undue burden on commuters.

In a statement signed by its Public Relations Unit and released in Accra on Sunday, April 14, 2024, the Ministry said negotiations for new public transport fares are still ongoing with the Road Transport Operators following the recent increase in fuel prices and other related operational cost.

It, therefore, wants the commercial drivers to continue charging existing public transport fares as directed by the Ghana Private Road Transport Union (GPRTU) of TUC and the Ghana Road Transport Coordinating Council (GRTCC).

Anyone who goes contrary to this directive, it added, will face the full rigors of the law.

‘The Ministry is urging the Ghana Police Service and other security agencies to be on the lookout for any driver who goes contrary to the directive issued by the GPRTU and the GRTCC’, the statement in part read.

But Sampson Addai disagreed with the position taken by the Transport Ministry, adding that the M
inistry is not clothed with any power to issue that directive.

‘The is no law that mandates the Ministry of Transport to fix transport fares or cause the arrest of drivers who decide to charge more after fuel prices have been increased. The statement from the Ministry was in bad taste. That is not how to talk to stakeholders. The Ministry has directed the Police to arrest any driver who has increased fares, what if the drivers decide that they won’t work, how will commuters move? The Transport Ministry should refrain from always recognizing only the GPRTU. Now, there are other driver unions who also have a large membership. The impact of the action by the other driver unions like the True Drivers Union and the Concerned Drivers Association has taken a toll on the public, so the Ministry of Transport should also engage them in negotiations and come to an agreed transport fares.’

Source: Ghana Web

Ghana Revenue Authority begins sensitisation on annual income tax returns


The Ghana Revenue Authority has begun a series of sensitisation programmes of individuals and institutions on the need for them to file their annual income tax returns not later than the end of April.

The Ghana Revenue Authority sets aside April every year as Tax and Good Governance Month to sensitize and encourage taxpayers as well as educate them on how to file their income tax returns and also pay the applicable taxes.

During the month, the GRA organises seminars, workshops and tax clinics to make sure that we get to the taxpayers and then tell them what their responsibilities are and what benefits they are in when they file their returns.

Speaking at a programme for public sector workers, Dr Martin Kolbil Yamborigya, Assistant Commissioner and Head of Audit for the Large Taxpayer Office, said aside from the objective of creating awareness, the sensitisation was also to remind taxpayers of their obligation in filing their tax returns.

‘We also educate them to understand that filing their tax return is
not just for you to pay tax, but it also affords you or gives you the opportunity to claim certain benefits,’ he said.

He said some of the reliefs taxpayers could enjoy, include child education relief, marital relief, and mortgage relief.

‘When you file your returns, you have access to that When you file your returns, you also have the opportunity to even claim an overpayment, assuming that as a result of this relief that you are enjoying, the taxes that you paid during the year is more than what you should have paid,’ Dr Yamborigya said.

‘You will be in an overpayment position and then the law requires that when you have overpaid your tax, then the Commissioner General is supposed to refund that to you within 60 days after the overpayment has been established.’

He said filing of returns was an obligation and sanctions such as monetary penalties and terms of imprisonment were applied to taxpayers who fail to comply with the law.

However, to encourage people to voluntarily comply, section 74 of the Revenu
e Administration Act was amended to allow taxpayers on their own volition disclose accurate information to the Commissioner- General to have their penalties, either monetary or imprisonment, waived.

‘So we want to encourage people and this is something that is not just like a one-off amnesty. It is something that was incorporated into the law that at any time a taxpayer can always take advantage of that,’ he said.

Dr Martin also urged people who earn income from outside the country to voluntarily disclose it and pay

the appropriate taxes in Ghana to have whatever penalties that would have been imposed waived.

Meanwhile, Dominic Adamnor Nortey, Chief Revenue Officer, said the tax on resident Ghanaians who earned income outside the country was not a new one.

He explained that the law had been in place since 2016 and required anyone who is in Ghana but earns income outside the country to consolidate all incomes, whether earned in Ghana or outside and then subject that to tax.

He said the law is now been im
plemented because the GRA now had enough information to kickstart implementation.

‘We don’t start anything when you don’t have the basis of getting information on people’s income outside. So, now that we have signed an agreement with about 170 countries where we exchange information, now we have information enough to believe that we can drive that aspect of the law and implement it successfully,’ Mr Nartey said.

‘The Act is clear that anyone who earns income, whether small, big or whatever it is, you have to pay tax on it,’ he said, adding that he had nothing to do with VAT at all.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Sunyani Municipal Assembly cautions waste collector to be diligent or lose contract


Mr Samuel Kofi Adagbodzo, the Sunyani Municipal Planning Officer, has cautioned the assembly’s waste collectors to be diligent in waste collection or lose their contracts.

He indicated the assembly’s determination to keep Sunyani clean, saying the authorities would therefore not hesitate to abrogate or terminate contracts that failed to meet the expectations of the assembly in waste collection.

Mr Adagbodzo gave the caution when he responded to some questions on measures the assembly had put in place to evacuate heaps of refuse dumps in the Sunyani Municipality at a stakeholders meeting held at Abesim, near Sunyani.

The Global Media Foundation (GLoMeF), a media advocacy and human rights non-governmental organisation, organised the meeting to collect feedback on a project it is implementing in the Sunyani Municipality.

With support from other partner NGOs, including Indigenous Women Empowerment Network and Citizens Watch Ghana, GLoMeF is implementing the three-year Resilient City for Adolescents Project,
(RC4A) in the Sunyani Municipality.

According to the foundation, the 300,000-pound sterling project, being funded by the Swiss Bortnar Foundation, seeks to improve lives and tackle the emerging challenges confronting the adolescent people in the Municipality.

However, the project’s stakeholders comprising representatives of the Ghana Education Service (GES), Ghana Health Service (GHS) Department of Gender, National Youth Authority (NYA) and civil society actors and organisations expressed concern about heaps of refuse dumps left at some localities in the Municipality.

Mr Adagbodzo explained the Sunyani Municipal Assembly had prioritised sanitation issues, and it had accordingly procured and distributed quantities of refuse containers and waste bins to households in the municipality.

Additionally, the assembly had procured two brand new sanitation trucks for waste collection, and cautioned residents against dumping waste indiscriminately.

The Municipal Planning Officer said littering and indiscriminate du
mping of waste and refuse would not only make the township dirty but could contribute to outbreak of communicable diseases.

Mr Adagbodzo said sanitation and proper waste management remained a shared and collective responsibility and called on the stakeholders to also contribute their quota to keep the environment clean at all times.

Mrs Jocelyn Adii, the Bono Regional Director of the Department of Gender, called on the assembly to rehabilitate the Children’s Park in Sunyani to create avenues that would help unearth and nurture the inherent talent and skills of young people.

Mr Raphael Godlove Ahenu, the Chief Executive Officer, GLoMeF, said the project implementation required support from all the stakeholders to achieve desirable outcomes.

In an open forum, some of the stakeholders, including parents, lauded the project’s concept but entreated the implementers to build and strengthen relationship with parents to monitor and check the movements of the adolescent engaged in the project implementation.

Sou
rce: Ghana News Agency

Apesokubi Traditional Council inaugurated


Mr Stephen Asamoah Boateng, the Minister of Chieftaincy and Religious Affairs, has called on the Chiefs to understand processes and procedures involved in resolving conflicts that may arise in their traditional areas through the judicial, arbitration and other alternative methods.

He said the Chiefs should know some of the processes such as land allocation, granting leases and land administration in general and some of the laws that cover the chieftaincy institution.

Mr Asamoah Boateng made the call at the inauguration of the Apesokubi Traditional Council in the Biakoye District of the Oti Region.

Richard Fedieley, Director, Research, Statistics and Information Management (RSIM) of the Chieftaincy and Religious Affairs Ministry, on behalf of the Minister made the call when he inaugurated the council.

This follows its official creation by the Ministry for Chieftaincy and Religious Affairs through the Oti Regional House of Chiefs.

Mr Asamoah Boateng expressed gratitude to the Chiefs and added that, Presid
ent Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo attaches prominence to the administration of chieftaincy in the country because chiefs play an important role in maintaining the peace.

He said the Ministry is mandated to develop an effective interface between the government, traditional authorities, religious bodies and civil societies on matters that relate to chieftaincy and Religious Affairs for the promotion of peace.

He called on the Chiefs to get to understand the processes and procedures involved in resolving conflicts through the judicial and arbitration system and other alternative methods in resolving other matters that may arise in the traditional area.

Mr Asamoah Boateng said the Apesokubi Traditional Council is a government establishment with a mandate to investigate chieftaincy cases for settlement.

He said the Council is to ensure the amicable settlement of disputes within the communities and ensure the peaceful co-existence for all Ghanaians and further enhance the administration of chieftaincy in Apesokub
i.

Mr Joseph Evans Anang Okropa, a District Court Judge administered the Official Oath, the Judicial Oath and the Oath of Secrecy for the 17-gazetted chiefs of the Apesokubi Traditional Council.

Nana Mprah Besemuna III, President of the Oti Regional House of Chiefs and Krachiwura advised the people to support the progress and development of Apesokubi Traditional Council by becoming ambassadors of unity, peace and development.

He said unity, togetherness and collaboration are his topmost priorities and would ensure that the elevation of Apesokubi to paramountcy status would become a blessing and an avenue to make Apesokubi stronger than before.

Nana Okogyeaman Kwasi Asiedu Koram II, Omanhene of Apesokubi Traditional Area thanked the Oti Regional House of Chiefs as well as all stakeholders for their role in ensuring the elevation of Apesokubi to a paramountcy.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Why is little heard about the massive investments in education under Akufo-Addo? – Kwesi Pratt quizzes

The Managing Editor of the Insight newspaper, Kwesi Pratt Jr., has commended President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo for significant infrastructure investments in the education sector.

During a discussion on Tuesday, April 16, 2024, on Peace FM’s morning show, Kokrokoo, and monitored by GhanaWeb, Kwesi Pratt highlighted the construction of new science laboratories across the country as a notable achievement.

He emphasised the positive impact of these investments on the improvement of examination results in the sciences.

“I have chanced on some information that points to the fact that a lot is going on in the education sector. I know what I am talking about, and Kwami, you know I do not speak without facts. A lot is happening, and the construction of new science laboratories is also ongoing.

“This morning, I was enquiring from Nana Akomea [leading member of the New Patriotic Party, NPP], who was a member of the panel, why the government has made all these massive investments in the country’s education secto
r but very little is heard about them.

“The education sector undoubtedly has challenges that we all read and know about but if you look at the construction of new science laboratories going on across the country, it explains why examination results in the sciences have greatly improved and I think this is what the government should be talking about,” Kwesi Pratt said.

Expressing his admiration for the government’s accomplishments in education, Pratt called for better communication of these achievements.

Stressing Kwesi Pratt’s sentiments, Nana Akomea, Deputy Campaign Chairman and Strategist for Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, the NPP presidential candidate, agreed on the importance of publicising achievements in the education sector.

Source: Ghana Web